SELECT THE LEGITIMATE SYNOPSIS FROM THE LIST BELOW

Too Tired to Die (1998): How many people does it take to burn a candle at both ends? Between swing shifts, blended families, and secret identities, Tucker, Jade, and Bush are tuckered out, jaded, and bushed. But when they get mixed up with some shady Columbians (Peppy, Buzz, and Viv), it's time to wake up and smell the coffee.

Too Tired to Die (1998): Jubiliah, a slave in 1850's Virginia, escapes from his cruel master and a life of backbreaking labor to undergo an arduous journey to the Free North.

Too Tired to Die (1998): Keith is a Japanese twenty-something who is followed by Death in various disguises. When he finally faces her, Death tells him that he has only 12 hours to live and he needs to make the most of it.

Too Tired to Die (1998): This 30-second French television commercial touting the alleged indestructibility of Michelin's premium product was accidentally released as a feature film—only to sweep the awards at the Cannes festival. It was later re-released as Nunc Est Bibendum and marketed to high school Latin teachers for last-day-of-school screenings.

Too Tired to Die (1998): This is the story of a neurosurgeon who is suicidal but not self-destructive. He deliberately induces his own coma--a profound state of unconsciousness. His parents and siblings gather around the hospital bed, and though they seem unable to awaken him, they regain their own degree of awareness of the importance of family.

None of the synopses above could possibly be legitimate!

I give up! What is the answer?
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